FYI/FYE
September 20, 2009
Op-Ed Columnist
Blue Is the New Black
By MAUREEN DOWD
WASHINGTON
Women are getting unhappier, I told my friend Carl.
.How can you tell?. he deadpanned. .It.s always been whine-whine-whine..
Why are we sadder? I persisted.
.Because you care,. he replied with a mock sneer. .You have feelings..
Oh, that.
In the early .70s, breaking out of the domestic cocoon, leaving their mothers.
circumscribed lives behind, young women felt exhilarated and bold.
But the more women have achieved, the more they seem aggrieved. Did the feminist
revolution end up benefiting men more than women?
According to the General Social Survey, which has tracked Americans. mood since 1972, and
five other major studies around the world, women are getting gloomier and men are getting
happier.
Before the .70s, there was a gender gap in America in which women felt greater well-being.
Now there.s a gender gap in which men feel better about their lives.
As Arianna Huffington points out in a blog post headlined .The Sad, Shocking Truth About
How Women Are Feeling.: .It doesn.t matter what their marital status is, how much money
they make, whether or not they have children, their ethnic background, or the country they
live in. Women around the world are in a funk..
(The one exception is black women in America, who are a bit happier than they were in
1972, but still not as happy as black men.)
Marcus Buckingham, a former Gallup researcher who has a new book out called .Find Your
Strongest Life: What the Happiest and Most Successful Women Do Differently,. says that men
and women passed each other midpoint on the graph of life.
.Though women begin their lives more fulfilled than men, as they age, they gradually
become less happy,. Buckingham writes in his new blog on The Huffington Post, pointing out
that this darker view covers feelings about marriage, money and material goods. .Men, in
contrast, get happier as they get older..
Buckingham and other experts dispute the idea that the variance in happiness is caused by
women carrying a bigger burden of work at home, the .second shift.. They say that while
women still do more cooking, cleaning and child-caring, the trend lines are moving toward
more parity, which should make them less stressed.
When women stepped into male- dominated realms, they put more demands . and stress . on
themselves. If they once judged themselves on looks, kids, hubbies, gardens and dinner
parties, now they judge themselves on looks, kids, hubbies, gardens, dinner parties . and
grad school, work, office deadlines and meshing a two-career marriage.
.Choice is inherently stressful,. Buckingham said in an interview. .And women are being
driven to distraction..
One area of extreme distraction is kids. .Across the happiness data, the one thing in life
that will make you less happy is having children,. said Betsey Stevenson, an assistant
professor at Wharton who co-wrote a paper called .The Paradox of Declining Female
Happiness.. .It.s true whether you.re wealthy or poor, if you have kids late or kids
early. Yet I know very few people who would tell me they wish they hadn.t had kids or who
would tell me they feel their kids were the destroyer of their happiness..
The more important things that are crowded into their lives, the less attention women are
able to give to each thing.
Add this to the fact that women are hormonally more complicated and biologically more
vulnerable. Women are much harder on themselves than men.
They tend to attach to other people more strongly, beat themselves up more when they lose
attachments, take things more personally at work and pop far more antidepressants.
.Women have lives that become increasingly empty,. Buckingham said. .They.re doing more
and feeling less..
Another daunting thing: America is more youth and looks obsessed than ever, with an array
of expensive cosmetic procedures that allow women to be their own Frankenstein Barbies.
Men can age in an attractive way while women are expected to replicate . and Restylane .
their 20s into their 60s.
Buckingham says that greater prosperity has made men happier. And they are also relieved
of bearing sole responsibility for their family finances, and no longer have the pressure
of having women totally dependent on them.
Men also tend to fare better romantically as time wears on. There are more widows than
widowers, and men have an easier time getting younger mates.
Stevenson looks on the bright side of the dark trend, suggesting that happiness is beside
the point. We.re happy to have our newfound abundance of choices, she said, even if those
choices end up making us unhappier.
A paradox, indeed.
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* Dr. James Ellingson, jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, mobile : 651/645-0753 *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *